By Fr. George Dorbarakis
Three are the basic points of the Service of the Holy Apostle and Evangelist Mark, which most likely constitutes a poem of the Holy Hymnographer Theophanes the Branded: his relationship with the apostles Peter and Paul, the writing of his Gospel, and his activity in the region of Alexandria together with the martyrdom that followed it. Already from the beginning it emphasizes that he became a fellow-traveler of the Apostle Paul and passed through all Macedonia with him, but in Rome he was shown to be the sweet interpreter of Peter’s preaching, while in Egypt, where he chiefly preached, he gave his life in a martyric manner (“Having become a fellow-traveler of the chosen vessel, and having passed through all Macedonia with him; and having gone to Rome, you were shown to be the sweet interpreter of Peter; and you found rest after having struggled in a God-befitting manner in Egypt, O all-wise Mark” - Sticheron at Vespers).
His relationship, of course, with the apostles Paul and Peter is not equal. The Hymnographer, while making mention of the following of the Apostle Paul by Saint Mark in the above troparion, nowhere else mentions anything of their relationship, and this because, as is known, the Apostle Paul did not wish to continue to have as his co-worker the then young John Mark, indeed his nephew, on account, evidently, of his inability to keep up with the feverish pace of Paul’s own missionary activity. On the contrary, Saint Theophanes repeatedly refers to the particular relationship which the Apostle Peter developed with Mark, considering the foremost apostle as his principal teacher, so much so that the Holy Gospel of Mark is in the end a recording of the teaching of Peter. From the roughly eleven troparia that describe Mark’s discipleship under Peter, we note quite selectively the following:








